Post on 05-Sep-2020
ASX Limited 2018 Macquarie Australia Conference, Sydney
Dominic Stevens, Managing Director & CEO1 May 2018
Strengthening the foundations for continued resilience and future growth
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• Financial results for the 9 months ending 31 March 2018
• Strengthening the foundations for continued resilience and future growth
• CHESS replacement journey
• Other licence to operate initiatives
• Listings framework enhancements
• Conclusions
• Questions and discussion
Agenda
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Highlights – financial results: 9 months to 31 March 2018
• Continued solid performance from diversified business with multiple growth drivers
Expenses • Full-year guidance unchanged at approx. 8% growth• 4Q will incur increased staff costs and digital consulting spend
Unseasonably strong 3Q
Unaudited resultRevenue and expenses as per the Group segment reportingVariance relative to the prior comparative period expressed favourable / (unfavourable)
Net profit after tax
$143.1m
EBITDA • 1H18 up 5.5%, a strong third quarter (13.9% up) drove 9 month EBITDA growth of 8.2% $470.5m
$351.9m
(5.9%)
+8.2%
+7.5%
(4.4%)
+13.9%
+12.3%
Mar 18 YTD
Variance% 3Q
Variance% YTD
$46.9m
Revenue• Strong quarter for Listings, Derivatives and OTC, Trading Services • Equity Post-Trade on par with pcp
$613.6m +7.6%+11.6%$204.6m
$157.7m
$121.4m
Mar 18 3Q
• Higher average margin balances• Elevated cash investment spreads
$63.8mNet interest and dividend income
+2.3%+2.9%$25.6m
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-
5
10
15
20
25
30
1H14 2H14 1H15 2H15 1H16 2H16 1H17 2H17 1H18 3Q18
Collateral balance ($billion)
1H14 2H14 1H15 2H15 1H16 2H16 1H17 2H17 1H18 3Q18
58.9 60.3 63.4 69.0 74.5
59.2 66.0 73.4 73.4 41.4
FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18
Futures - contracts (million)
3Q
2H
1H
18%vs 3Qpcp
Highlights – 3Q18 activity levelsStrong growth in secondary capital raisings and futures, subdued equity trading
36.7 38.6 54.6
36.8 44.8
29.3 50.3 24.0
19.1 11.7
FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18
Total capital raised ($billion)
3Q
2H
1H
80%vs 3Qpcp
417.1 454.3 529.5 539.0 510.1
413.9 512.2
529.6 540.5 265.0
FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18
Cash market tradingASX value on-market ($billion)
3Q
2H
1H
1%vs 3Qpcp
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Highlights – revenue: 9 months ended 31 March 2018
Unaudited result Revenue as per the Group segment reportingVariances are relative to the prior comparative period and expressed favourable / (unfavourable)
Strong quarter vs pcp, driven by futures volumes and secondary capital raisings
YTD revenue up 7.6%
Listings and Issuer Services● YTD revenue $164.4m, up 13.6%● Typically seasonally quiet quarter due to
Jan holidays and Feb reporting season● Subdued initial listings (26 in 3Q18 vs 49 in
2Q18) consistent with seasonal impact Secondary capital raisings up 86% vs
unusually softer pcp
Trading Services ● YTD revenue $157.4m, up 8.6%● Auctions trading up 13.0% vs pcp and up
6.2% on Dec17 quarter● Achieved meaningful revenue from new
data strategy ● Continued to progress data platform and
ecosystem strategy
Derivatives and OTC Markets● YTD revenue $212.0m, up 5.9%● Strong 3Q reflecting market volatility, up
18.3% vs 3Q17● Continuing positive impact from new
international customers● OTC notional value cleared up 23.9% vs
3Q17
Equity Post-Trade Services● YTD revenue $78.6m, up 0.6%● Average daily value for 3Q18 slightly ahead
of 3Q17 and 1H18 ● 3Q18 absent 3Q17’s ‘Trump bump’ ● Released proposed Day 1 CHESS
replacement consultation paper
19.7 11.8
12.4 0.4
0.8
570.1
613.6
Mar 17YTD
Listingsand IssuerServices
Derivatives& OTC
Markets
TradingServices
EquityPost-Trade
Services
Other Mar 18YTD
Revenue movement ($million)
Revenue up 7.6%$43.5m
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YTD operating expenses
Unaudited result Expenses as per the Group segment reportingVariances are relative to the prior comparative period
1.4 2.9 3.7
135.1 143.1
Mar 17 YTD Staff ASIC levy Other Mar 18 YTD
Expense movement ($million)
Operating expenses
• Staff costs up 1.6%‒ Average headcount in line with 3Q17 YTD
• ASIC supervision levy increased by $2.9 million from $2.2 million, up 132%
• Other up 7.5%‒ Postage increased $0.9 million, up 18%
‒ Electricity increased $0.9 million, up 81%
‒ Rent increased $0.4 million, up 5%
FY18 guidance unchanged• Approximately 8% operating expense growth
77.2 81.4 85.1 90.1 96.2
76.4 78.7 85.5 90.846.9
FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18
Expenses ($million)
1H 2H 3Q
Increased $8.0m, up 5.9% vs pcp
Strengthening the foundations for continued resilience and future growth
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Core customer value proposition
Listings Trade execution Post-trade
Initial and ongoing access to capitalLower cost of capital
Listings integrityBranding
Deep and diverse liquidityHedging and risk transfer
Market integrityEfficient and timely accessTechnical and data services
Capital efficiencyRisk reduction/nettingOperational efficiencySettlement certainty
Macro growth drivers Demand for financial assets Large and growing savings system
Growing capital needsProduct diversification
Globalisation of marketsAutomation of OTC markets
24 hour trading
Regulatory developments Operational efficiency needs
Capital efficiency needs
ASX initiativesExpansion of listings franchise
ETF/ETP listingsmFund expansion
Offshore customer acquisitionASX Benchmarks (BBSW)Centre Point innovationALC/ASX Net solutions
CHESS replacement/DLTOTC Clearing, client clearing Futures/OTC cross margining
ASX Collateral
MAP upgrade Business monitoring tools and processes ASX Net upgradeSecondary data centre Listings compliance enhancements Digital refresh
Operational infrastructure CHESS replacement Customer service improvements
Business development
Licence to operate
Strong core value propositionImportance of reliability and resilience drives ‘licence to operate’ initiatives
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OCT 2020 – MAR 2021
OCT 2020 – MAR 2021
*Dates subject to completion of system development, stakeholder readiness and regulatory clearance
DLT companies assessed
Decision to use DA and DLT system to replace
CHESSDec 2017
Build DLT prototype and enterprise grade software
Testing, internal and external review
Technology partner and software evaluation, commenced Dec 2015
Initial consultation36 detailed responses
Day 1scope
mid 2018
Stakeholder consultation and Day 1 functionality, commenced Sept 2016
Customerworkshops600+ people120+ companies
Industry working groups develop45 requirements
Proposed Day 1 scope released meeting requirements
Go liveAnalysis, build and testing
Incremental external software drops
9 months of industry wide testing
Analysis, building and testing, commenced Jan 2018
late 2020 -early 2021*
CHESS replacement journeyStage 1 complete, stage 2 completing soon, final stage 3 begun
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DLT will deliver benefits to customers CHESS currently sends messages to reconcile many disparate and varied systems
CHESS today• Highly reliable infrastructure for over 20
years
• All counterparties have their own bespoke operational databases
− different to ASX
− different to each other
• Counterparties
− constantly sending messages back and forth to reconcile their data with ASX
− also reconciling with registries, custodians, fund managers, super funds, wealth managers, retail
CHESS Today
Broker F
Broker E
Brank A
Bank B
Broker CBank D
CHESS messages back and forth
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DLT will deliver benefits to customers DLT-based CHESS sees common customer databases with built-in real time source of truth
DLT-based CHESS provides choice • Common database structure
• Connection to ASX’s single ‘source of truth’ DLT database via a node
• Databases to be kept in sync real-time without having to reconcile with ASX
• Common architecture enabling subsequently developed software to be used by any participant
• Opportunity for Austraclear to be upgraded onto DLT in the future
ASXCHESS DLT
Broker F Bank A
Bank B
Bank D
Broker C
Broker E
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DLT will deliver benefits to customers DLT-based CHESS means application software built for one – is built for all
DLT-based CHESS provides choice • Common database structure
• Connection to ASX’s single ‘source of truth’ DLT database via a node
• Databases to be kept in sync real-time without having to reconcile with ASX
• Common architecture enabling subsequently developed software to be used by any participant
• Opportunity for Austraclear to be upgraded onto DLT in the future
ASXCHESS DLT
Broker F Bank A
Bank B
Bank D
Broker C
Broker E
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Accelerating projects to contemporise technology platforms Will enable ASX to take advantage of the opportunities in the next 5 years
• Accelerating work to contemporise technology platforms will enable ASX to provide customers
‒ richer, more timely data sets
‒ better operational functionality
‒ improved analytics
• FY18 capital expenditure guidance remains circa $50 million
• As set out at 1H18 results, increase in capital expenditure due to secondary data centre upgrade forecast to be $20-$25 million over 2 years
• Delivering accelerated program expected to further increase capital expenditure by $10 million per annum for the next 2 to 3 years
• Capital expenditure expected to be circa $70 million in FY19
FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21
Secondary data centre
ASX Net upgrade
Operational infrastructure
CHESS replacement
FY18 – FY21 capital expenditure projects*
*Timing is indicative only and represents current planning expectations
FY17
SYCOM replacement
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6.6%
13.0%
16.4%
13.1%
Listings franchise expansion
All ASX listings
All ASX listings with <$50m market cap
ASX 200 Accumulation
Index
Strategy• List quality, investment-grade companies for
the long-term that grow, trade, clear and settle on ASX
• Provide investors with greater choice through sectoral and geographic investment diversity
Results to date • 784 listings occurred between January 2012
and February 2018
• If an investment of $1 was made in each listing, the internal rate of return is approximately twice the return for the overall market
Internal rate of return investing:
• $1 in ASX 200 on every day of every ASX listing Jan 2012 – Feb 2018• $1 in every ASX listing since Jan 2012 – Feb 2018*
*Includes back door listings
All ASX technology
listings
Since 2012, new listings have provided attractive returns to investors
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Listings compliance environment
2012• Good fame and
character requirements
• Major rewrite of Guidance Note (GN) 12 to regulate back door listings
2014• Amended GN 1
and GN 4 to tighten
‒ acceptable structure
‒ minimum free float
‒ minimum spread for emerging market issuers
• Released 3rd
edition Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations
2015• 10% minimum free
float applied via GN 1
• More control over standards by removing the right to appeal listings decisions
• New (foreign exempt) category for NZ entities
2016• New pre-vetting
process for listings
• 20% minimum free float and new suspension policy for back doors introduced as ASX policy pending rule changes
• Major strengthening of admission rules
• Introduced automatic removal of long-term suspended entities after 3 years
2017• Tightened rules on
reverse takeovers
• Tightened guidance on minimal working capital
• Introduced ‘show cause’ process to terminate delinquent listed entities
• Removed trading halts for block sales
2018• Tightened
guidance on good fame and character requirements
• Consulting on 4th
edition Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations
• Consulting on extensive package of listing rule amendments inc.
‒ issue and quotation of securities
‒ placement rules
‒ related party transactions
2013• Major rewrite of
mining, oil and gas Joint Ore Reserves Committee (JORC) Code
• Major rewrite of GN 8 to improve continuous disclosure
Quality is key: we continue to evolve and strengthen our listings framework
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Overall regulatory environment for companies
Pre-listing responsibilities Post-listing responsibilities
AUDITORS
POTENTIAL INVESTORS
• Read prospectus and understand risks involved or seek advice
DIRECTORS
• Oversee running of the business • Statutory duty to exercise due care and skill, and discharge
responsibilities in good faith and in best interests of the company
• Ensure financial statements comply with accounting standards and give a true and fair view
DIRECTORS
LEAD MANAGERS
• Due diligence on prospectus• Good fame and character checks
• Due diligence on financial aspects of prospectus
LAWYERS
INVESTIGATINGACCOUNTANTS
• Due diligence on legal aspects of prospectus
• Due diligence on accounting aspects and proforma financials in prospectus
AUDITORS • Provide assurance financial statements comply with accountings standards and give a true and fair view
SHARE-HOLDERS
• Elect/remove directors• Approve range of actions including remuneration
report, significant change to nature of scale of activities
• Provide assurance on 2 years (asset test) or 3 years (profit test) of financial statements
ASIC • Reviews prospectus for Corporations Act compliance • May issue stop order if prospectus false/misleading
MEDIA, COMMENTATORS, WHISTLEBLOWERS and OTHER STAKEHOLDERS Watching, reporting investigating and drawing attention to suspicious activity
ASX
• Reviews listing application and prospectus (including good fame/character checks) for compliance with conditions of admission
• May reject application if entity considered unsuitable for listing
ASIC • Monitors and enforces compliance with the Corporations Act• Has power to seize documents, interrogate under oath, ban
directors and initiate prosecutions with fines and prison terms
ASX
• Monitors and enforces compliance with Listing Rules • Enforcement via power to suspend or terminate listing • Refers potential breaches of Corporations Act to
ASIC to consider formal enforcement action
Keeping standards high: combined responsibility of many parties
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Conclusion
Strong 3rd quarter• Record futures volumes due to increased volatility
and new customers
• Secondary capital raisings were strong in February and March
• FY18 operating expense growth and capital expenditure guidance remain unchanged
• FY19 capital expenditure expected to be approximately $70 million
Positioning ASX for continued resilience and future growth• DLT-based CHESS provides benefits to customers
through efficiency and innovation
• With opportunities on the horizon, we are accelerating the upgrade of our technology platforms to enable pursuit of growth initiatives
• Listings compliance enhancements supporting strategy to seek quality listings for the long-term
We are making good progress strengthening our foundations
Questions anddiscussion
Appendix
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Income statement – 9 months to 31 March 2018
Dec 171H18 $m
Mar 18 3Q$m
Mar 18 YTD$m
Variance%
3Q
Variance%
YTD
Operating revenues 409.0 204.6 613.6 11.6% 7.6%
Operating expenses 96.2 46.9 143.1 (4.4%) (5.9%)
EBITDA 312.8 157.7 470.5 13.9% 8.2%
Depreciation and amortisation 22.4 12.2 34.6 (9.4%) (4.1%)
EBIT 290.4 145.5 435.9 14.3% 8.5%
Interest and dividend income 38.2 25.6 63.8 2.9% 2.3%
Profit before tax 328.6 171.1 499.7 12.4% 7.7%
Income tax expense (98.1) (49.7) (147.8) (12.7%) (8.2%)
Profit after tax 230.5 121.4 351.9 12.3% 7.5%
Unaudited result Revenues and expenses as per the Group segment reportingVariances are relative to the prior comparative period and expressed favourable / (unfavourable)
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Diversified business with multiple growth drivers
Diversification supports revenues across different market cycles
• Product and service diversification
– Primary market facilitation via listings – Cash market trading, clearing and settlement– Exchange-traded futures and options– OTC clearing– Depository, registry and collateral services– Information and technical services
• Asset class diversification
– Equities– Fixed income– Energy– Commodities
Revenue contribution by business - 9 months to 31 March 2018
Thank you.
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Disclaimer
The material contained in this document is a presentation of general information about the ASX Group’s activities current as at the date of this presentation (1 May 2018). It is provided in summary and does not purport to be complete. You should not rely upon it as advice for investment purposes, as it does not take into account your investment objectives, financial position or needs. These factors should be considered, with or without professional advice, when deciding if an investment is appropriate.
To the extent permitted by law, no responsibility for any loss arising in any way (including by way of negligence) from anyone acting or refraining from acting as a result of this material is accepted by the ASX Group, including any of its related bodies corporate.
This document may contain forward-looking statements with respect to the financial condition, results of operations, and business strategy of the ASX Group. These forward-looking statements are based on estimates, projections and assumptions made by the ASX Group about circumstances and events that have not yet taken place. Although the ASX Group believes the forward-looking statements to be reasonable, they are not certain. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that are in some cases beyond the ASX Group’s control, and which may cause actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements (and from past results). The ASX Group makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of any forward-looking statements in this document and undue reliance should not be placed upon such statements.
Forward-looking statements may be identified by words such as “aim”, “anticipate”, “assume”, “continue”, “could”, “estimate”, “expect”, “intend”, “may”, “plan”, “predict”, “should”, “will”, or “would” or the negative of such terms or other similar expressions that are predictions of or otherwise indicate future events or trends.
The forward-looking statements included in this document speak only as of the date of this document. The ASX Group does not intend to update the forward-looking statements in this document in the future.